The world has recognized that there is an environmental dimension to human rights and this is evident in the prominent, continuous support for the right to a healthy environment. There have been a great number of international declarations and statements since 1968 with increasing recognition between the basic connection between environmental protection and human rights. The resolution of the UN General Assembly in 1968 on the identification of the relationship between the human environment and the enjoyment of basic rights is the starting point. In 1972, the...
The world has recognized that there is an environmental dimension to human rights and this is evident in the prominent, continuous support for the right to a healthy environment. There have been a great number of international declarations and statements since 1968 with increasing recognition between the basic connection between environmental protection and human rights. The resolution of the UN General Assembly in 1968 on the identification of the relationship between the human environment and the enjoyment of basic rights is the starting point. In 1972, the landmark Stockholm Declaration surfaced, and it states that both aspects of man’s environment, the natural and the man-made are crucial to his prosperity and to the satisfaction in essential rights, “even the right to life itself, and that man has the fundamental right to freedom, equality and adequate conditions of life, in an environment of a quality that permits a life of dignity and well-being”. A recent declaration known as The Hague Declaration which states that it is, in fact, the from the basic fundamental right to life is which all other rights originate and stem from; securing this right is the principal
Duty of those in charge of states worldwide. The declaration of the UN General Assembly in 1990 states that “all individuals are entitled to live in an environment adequate for their health and wellbeing.” The resolutions adopted by the United Nations Commission on Human Rights in 1990 was called ‘Human Rights and the Environment, reaffirming the existence of a link between the preservation of the environment and the promotion of human rights.